Good fella: Robert Storr on Irving Sandler.
Storr, Robert
A Sweeper-Up After Artists: A Memoir, by Irving Sandler. New York:
Thames & Hudson. 382 pages. $30.
FIRST, FULL DISCLOSURE: I make a handful of brief appearances in
this book, having known its author well for twenty years and having
worked closely with him on several projects. This neither qualifies me
nor disqualifies me to judge the writer or his account in any special
way. Hundreds of people inside the New York art world and out could make
the same claim. Many of them are mentioned in passing and some are
discussed at length in these pages. Not all are famous, though numbers
of them were famous but have since slipped into obscurity. That's
the way it goes, and Sandler is nothing if not realistic about fashion,
even as he remains respectful of the struggle artists endure to keep
themselves and their work alive when public attention drifts or never
quite arrives. Indeed, one of the pleasures of this memoir is that it
remembers things and people otherwise lost in the shuffle, bringing
forward a vivid and various cast of characters spanning more than half a
century, and offering a fine, firsthand appreciation of the
accomplishments, antagonisms, foibles, and failings of the hosts that
made the scene Sandler has spent his life chronicling and celebrating.
The full-dress art-historical record he has drawn up is contained
in four volumes published over the last quarter century: The Triumph of
American Painting: A History of Abstract Expressionism (1970), The New
York School: The Painters and Sculptors of the Fifties (1978), American
Art of the 1960s (1988), and Art of the Postmodern Era: From the Late
1960s to the Early 1990s (1996). Narrative, untheoretical--at times
antitheoretical--and unapologetically focused not just on what happened
in the United States but principally on what happened in Manhattan,
Sandler's surveys have been widely criticized but even more widely
used, not least because they are readable and deeply informed by their
author's unrivaled access to the artists and art-worldings about
whom he writes. No one has seen more exhibitions in New York galleries
or sat on, or in on, as many panels for as many years. Nor has anyone
more scrupulously set down what people said in such forums, at openings,
or in intimate studio or bar conversations than Sandler. Name a painter,
sculptor, curator, critic, or idea man or woman and he will have talked
to them and made notes: Willem de Kooning (among his heroes) and Landes
Lewitin (who's Lewitin, you ask? and you will find out); Alfred
Barr (whose papers Sandler helped see into press) and Thomas B. Hess
(the great editorial champion of Abstract Expressionism and
Sandler's boss at Art News); Marcel Duchamp, John Cage, and Allan
Kaprow (their combined efforts kicked the struts out from under AbEx,
and Sandler, its scribe, was game enough to find out how and why).
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Then there are his art-critical nemeses: Clement Greenberg, Hilton
Kramer, and Rosalind Krauss. Sandler's blunt assessment of the
influence of their respective dogmas is a timely reminder of how the
will to intellectual hegemony operates in a sphere of activity so given
to unpredictable change as modern art, and how brief the reign of any
dogma is. In this context Sandler, who grew up in modest surroundings
and never affected the manner of his mandarin--or
faux-mandarin--adversaries, writes like a street-smart reporter
describing the workings of party bosses and machines in big-city art
wards. If the abuse of power comes as no surprise, in Greenberg's
case it nevertheless came in several forms. For Sandler, his meddling in
the studio was as damning as his manipulations of the market. In fact,
they were intimately linked, the first guaranteeing a product for the
second:
Clem's successful advocacy of Louis and Noland, and then of Jules
Olitski and Anthony Caro, got him the reputation of being a
"kingmaker." This attracted artists. So did his formalist dogma and
the implication that the entire history of Western art funneled
through the artists who accepted his dictation or, more specifically,
painted according to his specifications.... I was willing to grant
that artists might find Clem's theories useful, but the idea that he
told artists how to "improve" their pictures ... appalled me.... Clem
was also heeded by dealers and collectors. He would pander to the
rich, assuring them that what counted in art was taste; everything
else was incidental.... Clem himself was in "business."
Meanwhile the MO of Greenberg's rebellious disciples was
simple enough: "Krauss and her colleagues used art theory to gain
art-world power, and they were expert at playing art and academic
politics. Krauss had been a disciple of Greenberg but later
categorically rejected his formalist theory. She had, however, learned
from him how to acquire tastemaking power: Assume an identifiable
aesthetic position with a few identifiable premises, repeat them again
and again, and apply them to a relatively few privileged artists. At the
same time, identify an opposing aesthetic--modernism, in Krauss's
case--and attack it vehemently or dismiss it contemptuously."
Turning to the conservative Kramer's perennial attempts to get even
with the succession of modernist and postmodernist avant-gardes from
Abstract Expressionism on down, Sandler chronicles the role the former
New York Times critic and New Criterion founder played in mobilizing
public opinion against government support for the arts in the aftermath
of the furor over Robert Mapplethorpe and Andres Serrano. After
recounting Kramer's successful campaign to shut off NEA grants to
critics in the mid-'80s, Sandler turns to the reactionary
commentator's campaign against peer-panel review, a system which
insured that, rather than being handed down from on high by cultural
bureaucrats or self-styled connoisseurs, grants to artists were fairly
distributed to serious practitioners whose achievements were recognized
by others in their field. Of Kramer's role in all of this Sandler
unequivocally states, "It was shameful that Kramer's dead hand
weighed so heavily on living American art."
In the chapter called "My Pantheon," Sandler sketches
brief portraits of de Kooning, Franz Kline, Philip Guston, Mark Rothko,
Ad Reinhardt, and David Smith, all of whom he knew. Insofar as this is a
personal account and not strictly an art-historical reckoning. Gorky and
Pollock do not figure in this list because he had little contact with
Pollock and none with Gorky. Although Sandler wears his admiration for
these artists on his sleeve, the slipping glimpses--to use de
Kooning's phrase--that we get of them give us a sense of their
complexity and vulnerability. As we know, success hit the Abstract
Expressionists hard, causing them to doubt the authenticity of their
work as soon as it began to find collectors. Sandler describes a chance
encounter that brings this home more poignantly than the familiar takes
of kamikaze drinking at the Cedar Street Tavern. "As an avant-garde
artist, [de Kooning] had ... chosen a life of poverty. Then, in 1959,
his show sold out (to the "philistines").... He had great
difficulty coming to terms with his new riches. Once, in the early
1960s, he said to me with some bitterness, 'I didn't paint
today. It cost me $10,000.'" Sandler is also alert to the
eagerness of lesser talents for exactly the kind of acceptance that so
troubled Abstract Expressionism's hard core. Robert
Motherwell's self-aggrandizement is a case in point, as
Sandler's close reading points out:
Tucked away in Bob's statement on Bradley Walker Tomlin in the catalog
of Tomlin's retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art was a
mini-history of the influence of the European surrealists on the
American abstract expressionists "with Joseph Cornell, David Hare,
Noguchi, myself [Motherwell], and a little later, Gorky, as
transmission agents." That "a little later" was written in bad faith.
So was Bob's dismissal of his "friend" Tomlin as a "dilettante," and
in 1978, bitchily, as a "groupie."... These were cheap shots which
made my art-historical blood boil. The "groupie" remark appeared in an
obscure English magazine. But Bob knew that "information" planted in
out-of-the-way publications would be ferreted out by zealous young
scholars.... Bob achieved some of the success that he did because he
outlived most of his colleagues and kept himself available to young
historians, indeed, cultivating them.
While all of these sources and some of this first-hand information
appear in Sandler's earlier volumes along with his more
traditionally art-historical research, here he introduces himself as a
principal protagonist and arbiter rather than as just an observer. In
keeping with the author's way of balancing modesty with pride, the
book's title is both self-effacing and a badge of honor. It was the
Waspish poet and MOMA curator Frank O'Hara who gave Sandler the
archly French moniker "balayeur des artistes"--sweeper-up
after artists--for the role he played at the Tanager Gallery, the
pioneering downtown co-op where he made the other crucial friendships of
his career--with Philip Pearlstein and Alex Katz, and with Al Held, who
showed at the Brata Gallery across the street from Tanager (all of whom
feature prominently in this book)--while sitting shows and, well,
wielding a broom at the end of the day. But Sandler was not content to
follow the elephants; he listened and looked and then set off on his own
to check out the rest of the circus. These skills earned him the status
of a "made man" in the social clubs of Tenth Street and, among
the first of many institutional posts he has held, placed him at the
head of The Club from 1956 to 1962. College diploma and downtown
apprenticeships notwithstanding, Sandler has largely been a self-made
man in the many spheres where he has operated, picking up work that
interested him first and credentials only when they became necessary to
continue doing what he was already doing. While combining the several
overlapping professions that we read about in this book--critic at the
New York Post and in art magazines, professor of art history at SUNY Purchase, prolific catalogue writer, and freelance curator--Sandler has
devoted enormous time and energy to playing the role of
behind-the-scenes spokesman for artists, extending the do-it-ourselves
ethic of the old '50s avant-garde into the new post-'60s
reality of administered culture.
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While the first half of the book is given over to the glory days of
a close-knit though fractious bohemia, the second half recounts the
culture wars of an exponentially expanding system from the perspective
of someone on the inside who hasn't forgotten what it felt like to
be outside and is correspondingly determined to keep things open and
moving in an increasingly stratified and ungenerous America. Traditional
in some aesthetic matters but pluralist in his tastes and a staunch
advocate of unqualified artistic freedom in the public domain, Sandler
at seventy-eight is a liberal activist in a period largely given to
radical critique without effective praxis. His youthful socialism may
have given way to a pragmatic approach to cultural and political
matters, but it would be hard to find anyone who has applied himself on
more fronts to the task of defending the rights and improving the lot of
"art workers" of all kinds--from the struggles at the NEA to
cofounding Artists Space and convening panels on how artists should deal
with the survival of their work after their deaths. His low-key manner
and diplomatic approach do not preclude tart remarks about individuals
with whom he has done battle or who he feels have betrayed the trust of
artists, and in the last chapter he weighs his growing intellectual
pessimism against basic self-acceptance and an unabated appetite for
art, evidenced by an undiminished and, among his contemporaries,
virtually unrivaled presence in galleries where new work is shown. If
one can fault this book for anything, it is that this diplomatic stance
leads to sometimes frustrating discretion about the messier parts of the
world to which he has had privileged entree. David Sylvester, another
unrepentant "art lover"--but unlike Sandler an ardent
womanizer as well--was gossipy and sharp-tongued about his peers in
private; but when he began summing up toward the end of his life, he,
too, balked at telling all, or at any rate much, of what he really knew.
To ask Sandler to do so would be to challenge an utterly decent man to
act against his natural good manners. Still, time reduces the cost of
complete candor, and one hopes that another Sandler memoir will
eventually surface that will to some degree be for his generation what
the journals of Jules and Edmond de Goncourt were for theirs. At
present, however, we should be very happy to have this one. There is
plenty of juice in Sandler's stories, and readers should not
complain that the one kind that's entirely missing is bile.
Robert Storr is Rosalie Solow Professor of Modern Art at New York
University's Institute of Fine Arts.